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How Ancient Mechanics Thought About Machines

friedo writes "The NYTimes has an interesting piece about Prof. Mark Schiefsky, a Harvard classicist with an interest in the history of science. Schiefsky pores over ancient texts in Greek, Latin, and Arabic to decipher the origin of knowledge that's been taken for granted for millennia. For example, a Greek treatise published a generation before Archimedes' proofs of the lever laws explains why, if you were a galley slave, you'd want to work the oars near the center of the ship instead of closer to the hull."

76 comments

  1. Oh, the irony! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Funny

    "For example, a Greek treatise published a generation before Archimedes' proofs of the lever laws explains why, if you were a galley slave, you'd want to work the oars near the center of the ship instead of closer to the hull."

    Not a very useful treatise since if you were a galley slave, you probably couldn't read! Oh, and they wouldn't let you off the ship to visit the library and check out the treatise anyway.

    Those poor, poor galley slaves.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
    1. Re:Oh, the irony! by mschuyler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The galley slaves didn't need to read about it. They knew by experience. This proof was for the academics who only thought about rowing, but were not condemned to do it.

      --
      How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
    2. Re:Oh, the irony! by techno-vampire · · Score: 2, Informative

      This, of course, ignores the fact that in Greek times the oarsmen of a ship were paid professionals, not slaves. I doubt that there were any galley slaves in the Greek ships that won the battle of Salamis. Not sure about the Persians, though.

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    3. Re:Oh, the irony! by spun · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ah, but maybe you were an educated person taken as a prisoner of war and enslaved. Perhaps you'd already read the treatise, perhaps whilst helping prepare for said war. Then, you see, you could politely ask your overseer to let you work the inside of the oars. Being suitably impressed with your grasp of physics, they would undoubtedly let you do so.

      The problem is, you would rapidly figure out that you were badly mistaken in your choice. Working the inside oar gives mechanical advantage, sure, but what does that mean? You trade distance for effort. You are literally running back and forth while the guy near the edge barely moves.

      This is well documented in later times when countries actually used galley slaves instead of free citizens like the Greeks used. The Greek oarsmen worked one to an oar, and each had to be well trained and motivated to work together efficiently. All the rowing positions in Greek galleys were nearly equidistant from the fulcrum. The oars in larger Greek galleys were arranged in banks, one above the other. In Roman or Turkish galleys, oars were manned by groups of slaves, and in this case the outermost position was the most desirable as it required the least movement and effort. In Greek galleys, the most desirable position was on the uppermost bank of oars because you didn't have your face pressed into the ass of the guy above you.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    4. Re:Oh, the irony! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Greek galleys, the most desirable position was on the uppermost bank of oars because you didn't have your face pressed into the ass of the guy above you.

      Was this bizarro-Greece or something?

    5. Re:Oh, the irony! by Petrushka · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're thinking of Athens, not of Greece generally, and even Athens used slaves in its navy. Hence the social importance of the battle of Arginousai: after the battle the assembly voted to give freedom to slaves who fought in the battle.

    6. Re:Oh, the irony! by NateTech · · Score: 1

      Maybe we need some IT-related and sysadmin related "journals" for the academics then, too?

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      +++OK ATH
  2. Working conditions by The+Ancients · · Score: 3, Funny

    For example, a Greek treatise published a generation before Archimedes' proofs of the lever laws explains why, if you were a galley slave, you'd want to work the oars near the center of the ship instead of closer to the hull."

    Do you think it was mentioned in their induction pack along with their sunscreen, sunhat, and timecard?

    1. Re:Working conditions by elronxenu · · Score: 3, Funny

      ... and sample TPS report cover sheets.

      (That's TPS as in Trireme Propulsion System)

    2. Re:Working conditions by jd · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't need to be. The slaves near the middle of war gallies were the ones subject to in-fight catering. After that, it became common knowledge.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  3. Galley slaves had other worries... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For example, a Greek treatise published a generation before Archimedes' proofs of the lever laws explains why, if you were a galley slave, you'd want to work the oars near the center of the ship instead of closer to the hull.

    You'd want to be near the center of the ship only if you were interested in being more efficient at your slave job. Since the slave near the hull has to move his arms over a lesser distance, it could be argued that the hull seat was the better one.

    Of course, if you were rammed by another ship, you'd have a greater chance of being killed or sustaining horrible injury if you were in the hull seat...but since a rammed ship usually sank, and the galley slaves were usually chained to their oars, the outcome would probably be much the same, in the end...

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... by mschuyler · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You obviously didn't read the article:

      "That took scholars to figure out. "Think of the oar as a lever," Prof. Mark Schiefsky of the Harvard classics department said. "Think of the oarlock as a fulcrum, and think of the sea as the weight."

      The longer the lever arm on the rower's side of the fulcrum, the easier to move the weight. In the middle of the ship, as the rowers knew, the distance from hands to oarlock was longest.

      This explanation is given in Problem 4 of the classical Greek treatise "Mechanical Problems," from the third century B.C., the first known text on the science of mechanics and the first to explain how a lever works. It preceded, by at least a generation, Archimedes' "On the Equilibrium of Plane Figures," which presented the first formal proof of the law of the lever.


      --
      How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
    2. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... by jtev · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Being in the center has other benifits as well. You get the first chance at the gruel, you have one side of your body not being crushed up against the other galley slaves, all sorts of goodness. And one downside as well though. You're closer to the overseer's whip. So, I guess it evens out.

      --
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    3. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1

      You obviously didn't read the article:

      You obviously didn't read my response. Try again.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    4. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 0, Informative

      To be completely fair ramming of ships wasn't a common practice until well after the Bronze Age. Galleys and other warships were built extremely solid and ramming was used more as a way of getting your fighters over to the other ship than to actually debilitate it. Now if you want to talk about wooden shrapnel from oars being destroyed the hypothetical slave would be equally at risk wherever they were on the ship. In addition even if the slaves nearer the ship had to move their arms a lesser distance, they still had to use their legs to force the oar through the water. The fact that distance between rowing stations on early medieval Ottoman galleys is roughly equal throughout the length of the ship says that the distance covered by the oar would be equal throughout as well.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    5. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... by plopez · · Score: 1

      the galley slaves were usually chained to their oars, the outcome would probably be much the same, in the end...,

      at least in ancient Athens, they oars men were usually free men on board the war ships.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    6. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Of course, if you were rammed by another ship, you'd have a greater chance of being killed or sustaining horrible injury if you were in the hull seat...but since a rammed ship usually sank, and the galley slaves were usually chained to their oars, the outcome would probably be much the same, in the end...

      And why would a ship be rammed by another ship except during battle? And who used galley slaves on warships? It's hard to whip slaves to row fast enough, and having them chained makes them useless for repelling boarders.

  4. Library of Alexandria by Bananatree3 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Only a tiny, tiny fraction of the books and scrolls within the Library of Alexandria survived, and who knows what kind of complex science and engineering was put into those books. The day it burned the world lost the greatest knowledge resource at the time.

    The History channel has a program on some of these amazingly complex ancient machines

    1. Re:Library of Alexandria by zappepcs · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      and extrapolating from your comment, rather non-linearly, not having net-neutrality is today's equivalent to the burning of the Library at Alexandria. Well, sort of. Censorship at its worst in both cases IMO. Regardless of your own opinions, it must be admitted that censorship robs society of its best resource.

      That burning might be said to have been the point of the spear that was the dark ages. I wonder if we learned anything?

    2. Re:Library of Alexandria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Only a tiny, tiny fraction of the books and scrolls within the Library of Alexandria survived, and who knows what kind of complex science and engineering was put into those books. The day it burned the world lost the greatest knowledge resource at the time.

      For example, the recipe for fireproof paper.

    3. Re:Library of Alexandria by readin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Only a tiny, tiny fraction of the books and scrolls within the Library of Alexandria survived, and who knows what kind of complex science and engineering was put into those books. The day it burned the world lost the greatest knowledge resource at the time.

      Ever wonder how much knowledge was lost when the ancient Chinese burned all their books? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/To_burn_the_classics_and_to_bury_the_scholars

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    4. Re:Library of Alexandria by grahamd0 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Grasping at straws much? I know we all love the freedom of information here on Slashdot, but suggesting net neutrality is on par with the burning of the Library of Alexandria a pretty dramatic stretch.

    5. Re:Library of Alexandria by trongey · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...who knows what kind of complex science and engineering was put into those books... On the other hand, if we assume that nerds have always been pretty much the same, then we can extrapolate that most of what we lost was pr0n and strategy guides.
      --
      You never really know how close to the edge you can go until you fall off.
    6. Re:Library of Alexandria by SteelAngel · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Well, the original posting was about a type of strategy guide. :)

    7. Re:Library of Alexandria by oDDmON+oUT · · Score: 1

      Grasping at straws much?

      Maybe not.

      If
      Destruction by omission or commission, is destruction nonetheless.
      And
      Censorship equals the destruction of an idea.
      Then
      Just as the fire of the Library of Alexandria started out destroying only a few things when it started, so the demise of Net Neutrality will only result in the loss of a view things now.

      It's the end result that hindsight will define as huge...or not.

      --
      Some days it's just not worth
      chewing through my restraints.
    8. Re:Library of Alexandria by SaberTaylor · · Score: 1

      I seem to recall that the burning of the Library of Alexandria may have been overrated but I don't have a link for you.

      Something like the primary source that's the standby, and in all the textbooks may have been propaganda in some other setting for some other purpose. With there being no other accounts of that event. Vague enough? Possibly something to check in to.

      --
      If you need text styles to communicate then you don't have a message.
    9. Re:Library of Alexandria by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      then we can extrapolate that most of what we lost was pr0n

      Wow, I've never been more personally saddened by the loss of the Library of Alexandria until I read your post.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    10. Re:Library of Alexandria by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      But the world did then learn not to put all its books in just one library.

      I hope we also know not to put all our seeds in one arctic seed bank, etc.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    11. Re:Library of Alexandria by Detritus · · Score: 1

      That sounds like an early version of the Cultural Revolution. It's depressing that this pattern has been repeated so many times in ancient and modern history.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  5. Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by pbhj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm no historian but I think it's fair to say that slaves come via a variety of routes. For example being captured in a war. Abducted by pirates (the non copyright infringing kind). Simply abducted by people pulling a boat up at your village, killing a few people and carrying you off (do they count as pirates?).

    Now granted literacy through the ages hasn't perhaps been as high as it could but some of those galley slaves are going to be literates that couldn't be trusted with book work or who's masters wished to drive into the deck.

    Your point on access to the library is probably valid. But as they say "information wants to be free" ...

    I would say as a tyrannical slave-master I'd want to get the best from each slave, or know where to put those most in need of subduing.

    1. Re:Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I'm no historian either, which is why I used the weasel word "probably".

      Which is pretty accurate, if you were *alive* at the time this treatise was written, you were "probably" illiterate.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    2. Re:Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by pbhj · · Score: 1

      I think it's fair to say I was going to castigate you for weasel words ...

      L-O-L

    3. Re:Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by kalidasa · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Literacy rates in the fourth century aren't known, but for Athens itself, at least, the literacy rates might have been very high. There is a lot of controversy on this subject. We do know that a number of dramatic works intended for public production introduced characters about whom a point was made that they could not read, but we aren't sure if their illiteracy was intended as comic relief (if illiteracy was unusual) or just a marker of class or status (if illiteracy was common). Keep in mind that the Athenians kept a lot of written monuments (stelai and the like) - there would be no point to them if literacy rates were *very* poor. However, I'm pretty sure there were NO borrowing libraries: what libraries there were tended to be private. Alexandria is the exception - but even it was most certainly not a circulating library, and it's later than this treatise.

    4. Re:Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by trb · · Score: 3, Funny
      Literacy rates in the fourth century aren't known, but for Athens itself, at least, the literacy rates might have been very high.

      Of course they were literate. They knew ancient Greek!

    5. Re:Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by Thought1 · · Score: 1

      Literacy rates in the fourth century aren't known, but for Athens itself, at least, the literacy rates might have been very high... Unfortunately, "galley slave" rates within Athens itself would have likely been very low. There's this thing about boats being in the water... (:
    6. Re:Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by SEWilco · · Score: 1

      Are you sure the RIAA pirates aren't using galley slaves? Some of their scribings to the court look awfully similar to each other.

    7. Re:Not all slaves would be illiterate ... by Fieryphoenix · · Score: 1

      Most important of all to this argument is that, despite all the movies, Romans and Greeks did not use slaves to row galleys. The practice began in the Renaissance.

  6. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... THE WHIP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Well, think about it.. you have more than 1 slave per oar.
    Work = force x distance. It's the same amount of WORK whether
    you push the oar on the end, the middle, or anywhere else.

    The guy closer to the hull has to exert more force, but over less distance.
    When the pace picks up and the guy in the middle is flying out of his seat
    with every revolution trying to pull an oar around 5 feet sweeps, the slave
    by the hull is comfortably sitting on his bench.

    Noted, he must be STRONGER than the slave to the middle, but the same work
    is being done by each slave on the oar. If not, that's what the whip is for.
    And it's a lot harder to whip the guy by the hull.

    All you scholars and ivory tower slavedrivers need a few cracks of the whip
    to REALLY understand the physics of being a galley slave.

  7. And here's some good pics to illustrate the point by spun · · Score: 3, Interesting

    http://graymonk.mu.nu/archives/2007/01/roman_navy_on_t.html

    http://graymonk.mu.nu/archives/2007/01/superb_models.html

    Look at the oars in all three cases. They are almost exactly the same length throughout each ship.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  8. How Ancients thougth about machines? by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that was thinking Atlantis?

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  9. Galley slave would want to be toward the hull by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A galley slave doesn't give a damn whether the boat goes fast or slow. He just wants to look like he is working whilst working the least.

    So since the lever moves the furthest distance near the center, the motion is greater, meaning more work. Also the effects of a slave pretending to row are felt most acutely when the slave is seated in the middle of the boat.

    Also, the guy with the whip is closest to the slaves in the center, however having some distance between the whipper and the whippee may make the speed of the lash higher for slaves further away.

    Another consideration is whether being near the hull of the boat conferred any advantages/disadvantages in terms of ventilation/warmth/being out of the rain/being in the rain/etc.

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    ...
    1. Re:Galley slave would want to be toward the hull by epine · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I have to say that NYTimes article is a spectacularly good example of bad science writing. Without halfway trying, it manages to regress conservation of energy in the mind of the lay public by 200 years.

      The optimal product of force through distance ultimately depends upon build (body type). Most likely the lanky rowers will be positioned at the long end of the level arm, while the stocky people are positioned with shorter lever arms.

      Since you probably aren't being fed enough, your primary risk is starvation through overwork. It wouldn't surprise me that rations were set low enough that many rowers had short careers, once they burned out their physical reserves. That was certainly the implication in Ben Hur.

      Since you have to maintain cadence with the rest of the oars, your option to cheat is to catch late and release early. You can bet the guy with the whip has a keen eye for shading on stroke length (duration with blade submerged).

      I've stroked an eight before. Even without being able to see anyone behind me, I had a pretty good idea who was pulling their weight and who had good form. At the elite level, I'm told everyone knows who pulled a good race.

      In Primo Levi's books he talks about the hazards of being teamed up with the nearly goners: the ones who haven't got enough left to pull their share, and worse, the ones who no longer cared about life enough to slack for every extra second possible.

      It would be a bit different sharing an oar than lugging railway ties in the snow with half a shirt.

      Probably your best situation was to be paired up with the rookie who doesn't know his 4000 calorie work day is going to be rewarded with a 1500 calorie dinner. Until the third day when he faints and you get to pull both shares all by yourself.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawmill

      Prior to the invention of the sawmill, boards were rived and planed, or more often sawn by two men with a whipsaw, using saddleblocks to hold the log, and a pit for the pitman who worked below. Sawing was slow, and required strong and enduring men. The topsawer had to be the stronger of the two because the saw was pulled in turn by each man, and the lower had the advantage of gravity. The topsawyer also had to guide the saw so that the board was of even thickness. This was often done by following a chalkline. I was once told a story by a great ancestor that after a few weeks, the topsaw guy became so muscular he beat the crap out of the guy below, so the roles would often reverse, but that more often than not, the muscular guys took the easy jobs, and the small guys either ended up built like pit bulls, or were short for this world.

      Anyways, if I'm reincarnated on a slave galley, I'd like to have that NYTimes reporter sitting beside me on the "desirable" side with the long lever arm, to discover the bio-mechanical joys of finishing your stroke at a 45 degree abdominal recline while I dent his head with my elbow every time he slacks off.
    2. Re:Galley slave would want to be toward the hull by icegreentea · · Score: 4, Informative

      Completely true. A galley slave really wouldn't care. Which is why the Greek States by and large didn't use slaves. Almost all oarsmen were freemen, and they had to be somewhat professional. Athens (for example) built its wealth and its 'empire' on its navy, and thus there was a sense of pride in serving the navy. Not to mention, when you have 170 oarsmen, they have to work as a coherent team. Getting 170 slaves who really don't want to be there to work properly would be detrimental. In cases where slaves were pressed into service (in emergencies or what not) they were sometimes rewarded with freedom after serving.

    3. Re:Galley slave would want to be toward the hull by colinrichardday · · Score: 4, Funny

      Oh sure, drag facts and logic into Slashdot.

    4. Re:Galley slave would want to be toward the hull by bob_jordan · · Score: 1

      "A galley slave really wouldn't care."

      If I was chained to the seat, I would care about what happened to the ship.

      Bob.

    5. Re:Galley slave would want to be toward the hull by psydeshow · · Score: 1

      Nice post, yo.

  10. Other great knowlege repositories by gmezero · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's documented that the missionaries actively destroyed Mayan literature as being pagan works of the devil. The small scraps left hint at materials that might have touched on everything from law to stellar cartography.

    1. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by Robert1 · · Score: 1

      I don't know how extensive their knowledge of other mechanical subjects would be considering they never even invented the wheel. Yeah, you could argue some nebulous notion that they didn't have the right "conditions" for the development of the wheel, but the fact remains they never did.

      I would imagine, aside from extensive treatises on stellar movements and religious documents, that the Mayan documents contained little information of worth. Worth equating to natural of philosophical sciences (they were extreme traditionalist to a fault).

    2. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by jd · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Not just Mayan, but virtually all Mesoamerican writings. They also burned the vast majority of writings on Easter Island, rendering the language unreadable even today. (We actually know a little Mayan, although little is hopelessly optimistic.) As people might have realized by now, I get rather upset when knowledge is lost - especially in fire.

      We do know a few things about the Great Library of Alexandria - they had a theory of robotics, a copy of the Old Testament many times larger than all known books from that work, they probably had substantial texts on sun-centered solar systems (they'd worked on that for a long time), and since one rather mysterious artifact has been shown to have had differential gearing inside, I'm willing to bet they had substantial texts on such systems. Although Greek society was notoriously patriarchial, it is also known that there were female chief scientists, chief librarians and teachers. Whether they could have broken through their mindset will never be known, but their achievements in liberal, equalitarian science were unrivalled by many western nations until the 19th and 20th centuries and compare well with some parts of the world today.

      We don't know all the books were lost - the Archimedes Palimset shows that, and there are tales of many rotting and unreadable (by conventional means) documents in rubbish tips of Ancient Greece. Whether there will ever be a full study to see if other salvagable recorded history is out there, I don't know. It hasn't happened yet, and time only reduces what might have survived. I would argue that it is possible we could recover far more material than we currently have, but impossible if - as is happening - nothing is happening.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    3. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by geekoid · · Score: 1

      If only they were wise enough to use a distributed system and keeps copies elsewhere.

      Really, all are knowledge on a flammable paper in one place? Man, there's a forehead slapper.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      The Mayans had a notation for zero centuries before the Hindus, and had a base-twenty numeral system (except for the twenties place, which went by eighteen). The Spanish (and we) might have learned something.

    5. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      The ancient Maya civilization occupied the eastern third of Mesoamerica, primarily the Yucatan Peninsula. The topography of the area greatly varied from volcanic mountains, which comprised the highlands in the South, to a porous limestone shelf, known as the Lowlands, in the central and northern regions. The southern portion of the Lowlands were covered by a rain forest with an average height of about 150 feet. Scattered savannas and swamps, or bajos, appeared sporadically, interrupting the dense forests. The northern Lowlands were also comprised of forests but they were drier than their southern counterparts, mainly growing small thorny trees. -- http://www.indians.org/welker/maya.htm

      Good luck with your "wheels" on that terrain. I would be vey surprised if the wheel wasn't invented at some point, but I suspect it was found to be of little use for the most part, and faded into obscurity.
      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    6. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by TapeCutter · · Score: 2, Informative

      "they never even invented the wheel"

      So how do you explain wheels on Mayan toys?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    7. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Arabic numerals reached what is now Spain in the 900s, when it was ruled by the Berbers.

      So, no: the Spanish did not have anything to learn from the Mayans regarding number systems in the 1500s. They had already known it for 600 years! It was no longer an exciting new technology.

      (By comparison, calculus was found by Newton only 320 years ago.)

    8. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by dargaud · · Score: 1

      And how useful do you think the wheel is on rainforests or andean trails ? Answer: not very much. At all.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    9. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by jd · · Score: 1, Redundant
      Getting snarky. Hmmm. Well, I won't argue. The Greeks copied anything and everything they could, and it's really not as if it was significantly harder for them to make two copies rather than one. Which, of course, they probably did in many cases, which is why the Palimset contains so many "lost" ancient Greek works. They copied things down and kept the copies elsewhere. (Which, as the parent likely refers to, was my chief slam against the Seahenge archivists and archaeologsts.) Very likely, when the damaged, rotten parchments are (finally) scanned, we will recover much of the Library's lost works.

      This, incidently, is why throwing my comments back at me is so patently stupid and a waste of time. You can find out all of this stuff from the palimpset's website, numerous science journals, press releases, etc. None of this is hidden knowledge, it's insanely easy to find and verify. I may not know everything in the world, but we have this thing called the Internet. Sorry, but ignorance and naivety are neither amusing nor cute, they are the relics of, well, not the stone age, they appear to have used their brains. You could know anything and everything I can ever know within seconds with just a suitable search string from the right site. That just leaves the variable of intelligence, and I'm ranked top 1%. Your mental capacity is your own problem.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    10. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by niXcamiC · · Score: 1

      We actually know a little Mayan
      We actually know quite a lot of Mayan, it's ancient Mayan that we have trouble with, especially ancient Mayan hieroglyphs.
      --
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    11. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by jd · · Score: 1
      Ok, that's a reasonable point. I was thinking specifically ancient Mayan, the ancient codices, monumental Mayan heiroglyphs (which aren't 100% guaranteed the same as Mayan heiroglyphs anywhere else), and the fact that their writing system appears novel. (Most can be divided into left-right, right-left and alternating - also known as ox-plough. The page may remain as-is, rotated, flipped, or rotated and flipped. Easter Island's RongoRongo is ox-plough with the page rotated 180 degrees each line.) Mayan writings appear closer in style to the modern graphic novel, making any kind of deductive reasoning highly subjective. Stan Lee has a better chance of cracking the writing system code than conventional language analysts.

      There are two big hopes I see, for a breakthrough: if someone finds a Mayan complex in which there's a corpus of original material, or if some such material is ever found in a cold, dry cave. Much beyond that will be tough.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    12. Re:Other great knowlege repositories by colinrichardday · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So, no: the Spanish did not have anything to learn from the Mayans regarding number systems in the 1500s. They had already known it for 600 years! It was no longer an exciting new technology.

      And you are correct only if the Mayans did not make further progress. What did they achieve in the intervening centuries?

      (By comparison, calculus was found by Newton only 320 years ago.)

      Not if Leibniz discovered it earlier! Now where did I put that flame-retardant suit?

  11. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... THE WHIP by jd · · Score: 1

    On Roman ships, yes, but the Greek ones banked their oarsmen in Beowulf clusters and only had one oarsman per oar.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  12. Ugggg Foood Woooman Other Side River! by syousef · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Me make tree fall. Cross river. Get food and sex.

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  13. Re:And here's some good pics to illustrate the poi by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... to actually click on links r3eferencing a mans face near another mans ass...

    I'm thinking...No.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  14. Patents Prior Art ? by DrYak · · Score: 1

    who knows what kind of complex science and engineering was put into those books.


    Dunno. Hmm... Perhaps enough well documented technical and scientific treatise (specially maths and mechanics) to revoke a gazillion of the current patents on ground of "prior art" ?
    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  15. Re:Galley slaves had other worries... THE WHIP by lgw · · Score: 1

    I believe it was only the Vikings who had Beowulf clusters; the Greeks not so much.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  16. Re:And here's some good pics to illustrate the poi by a+whoabot · · Score: 1

    Two of three of those cases are single bank vessels, so of course they have the same length oars. One of them is a bireme (two banks) and would seem to actually have different lengths (the guys on the upper bank would have longer oars).

  17. Apart from the physics by Centurix · · Score: 2, Funny

    The last thing you need is to be sat in the middle seat between two really fat slaves...

    They probably had more leg room on those ship than we do in cattle class now. And I bet they could take fluids on board too.

    --
    Task Mangler
    1. Re:Apart from the physics by tuffy · · Score: 1

      The last thing you need is to be sat in the middle seat between two really fat slaves...

      I suppose the nature of the job ensured they wouldn't stay really fat for long.

      --

      Ita erat quando hic adveni.

  18. Being a bastard and jumping in OT by drachenstern · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This has got to be the highest percentage of users with a UID less than mine to have posted in a single thread in a long time. I haven't counted, but over half of the posts as of the 60 post count mark were by users with a UID less than mine, which is WILD!

    Yeah, I'm quite aware that this post was OT, I was just looking to get it pretty high up on the discussion. I know how to game /. well enough too!

    As far as the article, I'm surprised no-one has mentioned the Yonaguni civilization and what may have been lost from even back then!!?!?!! Well, of course, there is no guarantee that there actually was a civilization, but when it comes to how the ancients thought about machines, I'm more interested in the older civilizations and how they may have spread around the world into the civilizations that we all "know". Here's a clickie for those that don't know about Yonaguni (sorry for the paranoid site reference, but it's informative and has lots of viewables): http://www.morien-institute.org/yonaguni.html

    --
    2^3 * 31 * 647
    1. Re:Being a bastard and jumping in OT by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      Eh?

      Get off my lawn, etc
      ;b

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
  19. Peer review for Transactions Library of Alexandria by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1
    So did the ancients have a peer-review system that sucked camel balls?

    Like a Transactions on the Geometry of Levers where they publish a paper where the logical conclusion is that a lever can apply a force without a fulcrum? And when a scribe tries to publish a paper pointing out that absurdity and corrects the flaw in the geometric reasoning, that paper languishes 7 months in review until some doofus of an anonymous reviewer complains that the author doesn't belong to the correct Guild of Scribes to publish in that journal and the associate editor acts all sanctimonious?

  20. Not slaves. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    OK - I know a LOT about Greek warships and nearly every aspect of this article that talks about Greek ships is utterly bogus.

    Firstly: Greek oarsmen were not slaves - they were free men...and quite well paid too. In times of war, each town or village would put forward their own team of oarsmen to man a ship - and competition between villages to produce the finest and fastest oarsmen was intense. It wasn't until much later when the Romans started using oared warships that slaves would have rowed them. The Greek galleys were like the sportscars of the era - fast, sleek - efficient. The guys who rowed them were highly trained athletes. In any case, you couldn't possibly use slaves in a Greek ship because there were about 150 oarsmen and only about a dozen other people on board. In the face of a battle - there is no way that 12 overseers could possibly prevent 150 slaves from simply rowing off in the direction of home never to be seen again! The Roman ships were slow, lumbering and largely ineffective - basically just platforms on which the Romans could pretend they were fighting a land battle. They had far more soldiers on board than the Greeks did (another reason they were slow) - plenty enough to stop the slaves from revolting.

    Secondly: The total amount of work you have to do doesn't depend at all on where you sit in the ship. If you are further from the fulcrum, you don't have to pull with so much force on the oar - but you have to pull it faster in order to keep up with the other oarsmen. Since work done equals force times distance - you have to do exactly the same amount of work per oar-stroke no matter where you sit...and in order to keep that forest of oars from getting all tangled up - everyone has to do the same number of strokes per second. Hence the total energy per hour of rowing doesn't depend on where you sit.

    Thirdly: The REAL reason oarsmen preferred the middle rank is because they didn't get the direct heat of the sun bearing down on them like the top rank of rowers did. Furthermore, (and this was a running joke in the literature of the time) the guys in the bottom rank of oars sat in a position where the butt of the middle rank guys were pretty much right in their faces - and they'd get farted at ALL THE TIME! So the sweet spot was the middle rank - and that had nothing whatever to do with fulcrums and levers and such.

  21. Re:And here's some good pics to illustrate the poi by Mikkeles · · Score: 1
    A great book that describes a lot of old skills, crafts, and techniques is The Technical Arts and Sciences of the Ancients by Albert Neuburger translated to English by Henry L. Brose about 1930. A recent edition is from 1969, but I don't think it is currently in print.

    It's quite neat the ingenuity of people when brute force (engines and motors) is not available.

    --
    Great minds think alike; fools seldom differ.
  22. Mayans had wheels, they were useless by georgeha · · Score: 1

    without a strong beast to pull a cart. Alpacas and llamas just don't cut it.

    They kept the wheels for toy.s

  23. Re:And here's some good pics to illustrate the poi by spun · · Score: 1

    Now that's actually true, but not as described in the article. Front to back doesn't matter, but the upper bank of oars has to be longer to make it to the water, doesn't it? And the length from the fulcrum to the rower would be about the same, or only a little longer. So the upper oarsmen would have less mechanical advantage.

    I think what this illustrates is that the original ancient Greek writer didn't know a lot about galleys.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  24. Flawed reasoning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The lever principle doesn't make it better for a galley slave to be in the outer row. It's not like they put scales on all the oars to measure the force each slave was exerting. The outer bank slaves would be expected to work just as hard as the inner bank slaves. If you don't look like you're straining at a proper level, the quartermaster is going to beat you regardless of where you're sitting.

    The difference is the outer slaves go through a greater range of motion, which might utilize their different muscles more evenly, allowing them to contribute more work before they get fatigued. There's also probably better airflow next to the aisle.

    Of course, understanding the principle would be useful if you have a limited number of rowers and want to know if you should position them near the bulkhead or the centerline for maximum rowing force.